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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-08-12, Page 6f i . .1�5i{ r I,.ia •i'1u i J% i. VjA' `, 3a. lit FM i <;� .�' F ..,r , iS"w!"""'t ,.. w• rw} ',' .:rf ti J i!7 t .t '� w 5;: WM ,. ., t ,; .; ,i (,. H rf�,. ,I :. ,..,,,t. P P ,:. fd i t .. r7 .,,. :I. r ,7- ... 1. .• 'a,. 7 ,s; -,r; 4 „ 1 ,.,;Fr r 1 ,,..: n.,rkE J..+�,,... o: r,r �.l,n, ., ...,:. , .. „} .;..... I I !, I7, .. ,,.}}11 .'. , r,. ,. r ,... _� •u..: 4. r.a 1 -{"! 'r,;..l 1 71n �,. ,r i1,: r•ae..� ! a SP n:a« .a „.. a �;, 1p 4 •Y E J' n. i.e- 1. I ._'i,.. _.. , }} '! r '�r t ere•.... 9Y t,. dr .,' .,,. b. I. ,�^.: n �',. bl. a 1 7::,u, 01. l: •.,cb ,I t:. ,1"N ,. �.. ,jl 9, ,. y, , .3 c, t F . {i::. (.,, ¢,h,1rA+ irh, 1 ,..a, d w:I '�•.;::➢Y a i :1•.1: g Sla , r �..r ttk+`t' ii+ o. ..a .1^, i..:, "T ,1q i I G :d.,,t, n}ri., ''II tl it �.w. r v, r + i •1 ;.,.. :::);t i d{ '� , .i,4, 1,,. .0 r; iii, J. {,. -r. f .,� I.. .•t n;a: A....... 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": Thus the future Ding of Britain is r. 4��1v } a ,man who is intimately acquainted,, HQT%k WAVERLEY HAS- ALWAYS ,,` r e 2y "F A fico days 'ago all En sh CaUr', Where dad 118 get his estates? one BEEN POPULAR 'WITH MOTORISTS 9 i'Cl4N l i*%; ` scrub a fraudulent 'biogzaliher of the nnuy ,ask. not with Ons industry but with many. a , 'This its the reason when the Prince , BECAUSE OF ITS FIN¢ ROOMS -TASTY l o .y.. n...e of ed that les he twasaauthorihaving i of oThe ther}pa celsestates inher'bednumhihe addresses $ri++fish inTlustr from time INEXPENSIVE FOOD AND PARKING r, ,, ,r, Teiby Y FACILITIES. E ,,,a�a�� British royalty to give publicity to Prince of tL'ales from his' predeces< to time, even a man Tike Sir William sot -his Morris, the English lilenry Ford, says THE GARAGE IS ONLY O.NE MINUTE �1�� ; " J� would -ter woman fakerf�cts. Every norints a magi on�t tution ttl ere states are oer. Under the ns 'that he really knows what he is tariti-snlk- GABA RAND RETURN TTTENDANTS HEM WHEN RKE CARS E- , rr' N,�y, �& a man O P y n Ing about, t1UIRE PLENTY OF C48 PARKING SPACE. fI, unary inside ` facto about British ' herite,d by the Princes of Wales. King . royalty. Such articles. ten.(j ng to Edward received only $165,x0% a Single $1.5040 $3.00 11, , `lI snake light of the Prince of 'Vales year frons the Duchy estates. ding W Rdt¢S Double $3.00 to $5.00 r fiml good .markets in America, The Edgard, when Pirince of Wales, did The Chewing` Gum Industry L. „ ' , • b J E. R POWELL. P.P. biography written by the Ertgltan not attend to business as assiduously (Condensed from.Fartune, April, ' IfR faker who is now doing time was as King George did when he was P ' 32' HpTEI. WAVERL�i� ' t trtur.,pe'teci in the American press. Prince of Wales, King George made by The Reader's Digest) s:4 . The Prince often good-rnaturetlly the property earn $300,000 a year. Spa dina Avenue and College Street Notable among the villains of U. S. 1r •' ' cc,nsents to give his name to some But 'the Prince of Wales, by the in- history iso Antonio Lopez de Santa i W,1u se, Folder r": charitable publicity, and at time's he tl-oductiou of modern business meth- Anna who in 1835 led an overwhelm- ■ ii` has eve�1 helped British indu.�try by ods anti more so ,by applying efficient ing Mexican Army against the Tex - 1..r wLa!;ng a soft collar or a .certain :marketing nietho,ds, has raised, his '� kiutl of shirt. :++come to $5(10,000 ,a year, $75,000 of B Alamo. In the Alamo James The 1'1'iricP's respar,ible secret:tr- •shish 1� annually devotes' to char- Bowie, Davy Crockett, and many an - des are on she watch to protect the tty. After deducting his own ex- other noted frontiersman died to the during are believed to dale 'back to t,. last man 'fighting off Santa Anna. the Spanish conquest), and since a u . future British monarch f'ro'm further i>enses, he applies the balance to his For ¢van y years thereafter the ery tree must lie fallow for six years eunvmercial exploitation. The exploi, properties. "Rem Vm'ber the Alamo!" r a n g after it is tapped, ver little of the s^ . ttation has gone so far that titled lad- A few years, ago he decided that a through the troaubled history of Tex- chicle conves ,from anan-Imade planta- , . i'es in penury have been introducing row of houses he was building for as. This Santa Anna was a hand- , tions. British and foreign ladies with bulg- his tenant farmers should have gas some, •part -,Indian geneTal with a There is no chicle market, in the �" ing Docket books and empty steads ranges. He was in the market for Napoleonic lust for ot- ito function's where the Prince under two hundred and fifty. The British P power. His later sense rkt there is a wheat or a sae career included several terms as ;ban market. The Big Three' use prac- ane excuse or another has been las- range manufacturers barricaded him, President of Mexico, orpe stretch as "tically the entire crop. Although they rood to make perftrmrtory appear- He vvas y}xovvrx thirty +five ,models. dictator and,' `irlevi+fatly, "several p'gr- '.buy a certain amount from brokers alines. The building contractors were press- iods of exile. During one of the Iat- and native producers, they gather the The Prinee no longer contributes di- ing for the installation. He had only ter he ,am, to +Straten Island, off great bulk -of their requirement them- • rectly or indirectly, if he can help it, twenty-four hours left to decide on the top of Manhattan, and there, re- selves. This ikeans (Etat Wrigley anti to any function that is liable to be what make he should contract for his tired into a little stone ,house in 'Sail- Chicle Development Co., a "joint'su;b- utilized to exploit him socially or: houses. That evening he had prom- ors Snug Hiarbor. He stayed there sidiary of Beech-Nut and American commercially for the ,benefit of the ised to "lend" himself to , a charity ,a, yea and then, handsome and mys- Chicle, nava to 'bargain fbr cones - ie of ball. Iri the course f a dance th - I e intimate friends nds o e v us. . Th n .amt tto t +Tows ea r e as �e he sailed for '1Vtetrtieo siO • " the Prince claim than he was never youngdaughter of a titled lad no- ns wi>vn whatever government or g y and out of this ehronacle forever. governor is current in 'hire sapodilla frivolous, and to -day he is looked up- ticed that,.the Prince 'was worried. But he left behind in his desk drawer country, have to fit out annual expe- on as one of the most successful butsi- "Perhaps your highness is nerrv- ,a •hunk of chicle an act which b the eitions •throe h the jungle on which nfss men in the British Emlpire. our over your"coming speech," the y g irony of time 'has become apparently wiry litt,e Mayans called' chicleros Frorm;• a renovated Queen 'Anne's girP'sid,'� mere far-reaching than any other of swarm up the trees and . gash the hawse near Buckingham Palace, he "No, it is those gas ranges," he his long and ,tempestuous career. bark with ,big sharp machetes. Visit- runs a, coal mine, an ouster fishery answered. The hunk came into the hands of ing the wild, hence scattered, sapodil- and a silver fox farm. He furnish- The butterfly of a girl could not one Thomas Adams. Being a rest- In trees is troublestoxne, but a 1000- 1. es British florists with flowers grown understand why Qthe future King of legs, ingenious Yankee, Adams (began acre plantation started'several years by his miners out of :season. He al- England should worry over gas rang- to experiment with. the gummy, stuff. ago has not yet .successfully solved, so owns teazel plantations. Alto- ei." He tried without appreciable success the problem of domesticating the gether~ he emlploys about fifteen hum- The wide range of interests in lig -to vulcanize, it, and so produce a new tree. Revolution, hurricane and jun- dred mien on his estates. Hie has, Duchy of Oornwall estate compels kind of rublber. Then he thought it gle death. are the nor ' 1 hazards of thousands of tenants on his lands and the Prince to rise ,very early every might work'¢ as a setting for .false the Ibusine ss. ,., . takes a personal interest in the af- morning, and often he. works late at teeth, but a dentist friend rejected it The founc'ation of th chewing gum fairs of many of his individual ten- night. He owns surface property' in' scornfully. Finally he recalled that industry, according to advertising ant -farmers. fifty different manors, and in seven Santa Anna had chewed his' chicle, claims, is that chewing gum "aids di= - . v A few months ago he astounded an or eight he owns the minerals Only'. an immemorial Mexican custom to gestion . . .whitens teeth . audience of agriculturists when he On one of his estates alone there are which the confuistatdore:s ascribed :;oothe,a thy. nerves." Its real founda- simgled out an 85' -'year -4d retired two hundred and seventy farms. Al- the flas'hinlg white teeth of the Aztec Lion 'is p obably the simple fact that farm -employee from the . gathering I together he has two thousand farm- maidens. Thomas Adamis, finding it people like the "notion of chewing. by saying, "Here is my old man of! er-tenants. flaky,boiled.it, chewed it and at last kr. John B. W'atxson, -the eminent be- ..Devoh," wham he had not seen for 151 A few weeks ago he flew dowry to produced a delightfully gooey, c'he'wy hav^iorist, cabs gum chewing an "adult years. Cornwall, and there in the co-opera- 1- substance. He rolled this Out with pacifier," 'a form of relaxation on the Even in England not many people', Live dining room he had tea with two his wife's rolling -pan and- sent it to order of biting .your nails, chewing 1. -now that the Prince of Wales does hundred of 'his tenants. He has an a candy store in Jersey City. It was up lead panoils, or making curlicues not receive an allowance from the i estate covering the whole of the Scil- an immediate sensation. B. ox after on a pad while telephoning. The state or from his ,,father. His es- , er Devon and Cornwall. He has iso- box sold until Adams was ordering Freudians, on_the other hand, believe maters ta-day earn hint an income of ly Isles. His estates dat. thickly ov- more chicle, and he and his sons that babies acquire a certain oral '•` five thousand dollars a year. ' ' 1 lated holdings in Wiltshire, Dorset, were giving all :their time to the mak- sensitivity while feeding from the Somerset and Berkshire, ing of the stuff. In 1871 Adams took breast (or frorn a bottle) which in Farming is not the only industry out a patent on the first gum -making l ter .lito derives them to do such I on the Prince's Cornwall estate, He machine. Later he added sugar and thing's wits, their mouths as to chew •�j .ov-n's an oyster fishery near Fal- flavoring extracts to the chicle. And .gum. Wra:'ever the physiological T2 y j nlOWUh, Down in the Holford river s �"�y� �� business boomed. atisfaction. ',t' was and is sornetlung H 'a�^t a 27,231_�,_",�.,. - you willfind his beds, 'from which All that happened not so long after that could he sold' by advertising in =�1--��" 1 : ore of the,, most succulent oysters Charles Dickens had set down that j a big way That was Wrigley's dis- I •"t`rc �I 'til _fljilN,� "�(°I";I' I' in the avOrld are sent to British'"din - the sheaving of tobacco was the cor- co,very and his triumph. +-S � 7� I II it I 1 ing tables through an agency in Lon- n•erstone of American manners. Dick- _ don. enses of to -day would so deSCribecthe Only those who are- familiar with chewin of um,, for ever g. g y year every FARM NOTES YEAI�..S � the china trade know that the befit man, woman and child in these Unit- � crockery ovv�es its whiteness and gloss ed States, statistically speaking; I. �wo up�® to a clay which is found only in the chews up over 100 sticks of chewing [$�q Prince's Cornwall and .Devon mines. gum, and this vast quantity of gum Find New Disinfectant. The clay is also used for coati¢ .La g' pa- has a nominal retail value of some An effective disinzectant f'o r per. The Prince knows the. trade, $114,000,000. poultry houses developed at the . and since he inherited the estate In the vast gum industry of to- Dominion. Experimental Station, Len- from his faithe.r he has introduced the dray; according to reliable estimates, noxville, Que., and, one which is milk -white mineral into many other 95 out of the 100 sticks crammed in- proving entirely atisfactor for I manufacturers. On his estates tin, y ., to every American mouth are made washing Dopper and iron are mined. Theis by three g poultry equipment and hous- producers. The Big Three es is made up as follows: are countless tin shafts and china of gum are Wrigley 60 per cent. .� .. TORONTO ( P cent.)., Dissolve three uarters of a . clay pits that provide labor directly Beech-Nut (20 per cent.), and Aimeri- -q pound to hundreds and indirectly. to thou- can Chicle 15 of concentrated lye in as small ' a AUG. 26 to SEPT. 10 ( per cent.). Children`s quantity of water as possible. It will • sands of English laborers. gum is a distinct subdivision of the (1xCLUSIVEI Since the Prince inherited his es- industry. Made of cheaper in edi- be necessary. to 'do this several hours fate's he in'•tr•odulced flower -growing P before e l required, as the, lye AGAIN comes .the great °event to gz' wing ents •than the regular adult lines, should be cold' when used. '�'o this which hundreds of thousands I to his Scillies' tenants. His tenants children's gum caftires in enormous, x wondered what they could do with the brightly add- 1 /a ,quarts of i aw linseed oil, look forward the 'World's Largest g y wrapped hunks fora penny. slowly stirring meanwhile." ' Keep Annual Exposition. The Exhibition I flowers. The Prince saw, to it that Its brand names must be 'changed' stirring of 1932 • brings new exhibits -new i the,beautiful flowers were put in the almost overnight for children are nb- g until a gga du liquid soap g London, Liverpool and Manchestgr tmiousl g produced, then gradually adti one features, new Ideas, the wonders of y^ fickle and will flock to a anon of commercial creosol, stirr< Industry, Science, Art, Education, markets. His boats carry the flowers novelty which happens to please them,. ng constantly until the fluid is a �o inland cities and towns by rivers Most children's guru is known in the Sport, Agriculture, Pageantry,'RecI I and canals, and the Scillies' Flower trade as "bubble gum" because it is clear dark brown. Use one-half cup cion, Fashions, Travel, Eneineerin- Express makes its daily run to Lon- specially compounded so as to eT 'of the mixture to a gallon of water. r Automotive and Music are presented I don• m'it its being blown up into those - inexpensively and comfortably. I The Prince saw that his Welsh huge bubbles which -you may observe . OPENING DAY, Fri., Aug. 26.- { miners were not regularly employed. dangling from the lips of many an Soybeans in Ontario. 4�'omen's Marathon Swim for world ' He is now teaching them how to ill-bred child. grow flowers when, not employed in Of course chewing gum is not en- "Soybeans in Ontario" is the title championship, starts at 1 p.m. This is ¢lines. He markets the flowers as tirely $$.onfined to our shores, but, only of a very interesting pamphlet pre. the women's sport feature of the year in fast as his miners can grow them. aboty�two per cent. of our production; pared by Professors W. J. Squirrell which, the greatest natators . will At Chakford the Prince has a sil- is exported to -clay. The Wrigley and J. Laughland, of the Department compete for cash prizes and tide of ver fox farm with two hundred and company, which is the biggest figure of Field Husbandry, 0. A. C., copies world's professional champion. seventy pairs. in the business abroad as at home of which are obtainable through your u4'ARRIORS' DAY,•Sat., Aug. 27.- At his Midsomer Norton. Collieries exports veryalittl , for it has factories local agricultural representative. Soy - Canada's lance<r veterans' parade � he experimented the Socialist theory in England, Australia and Germany, beans were, first tested at 0. A. C. r . and- re -union. .N itary and `aval and handers the mines over to the Of foreign mrarkks., Great Britain is in 1893 and distributed for co -opera - Review with 500 massed musicians. miners, himself acting as a dollar -a- largest (alas for Dickens); the P71i1� Live tests to farmers in 1901. There The ma<nificent pageant -"THE ' Fear-rr:an. The 'experiment worked. i , Japan' ( ggresively are many purposes far' which soy - p • g g y ppiner are next Ja an a beans can ,be grown. As a supple- rRiU't1PH" will be staged The collieries are making money for Western in this as in other• things) mental hay crap they have an im- nightly by 1,500 performers, depicting I the miners. is third and Franee'is foprtir. rhe evolution of a great Empire-- Then the Prince went into teazel The last market was an expensave portant place. h; yield and quality colourful costumes and martial music; growing. It has now become a "big acquisition far our of fodder the crop ranks high, and guTri makers. Gum being a legume, soybeans are 'bem- i 12oya1 Canadian Dragoons in famous industry. He introduced mlgdern has been introduced to Fremch peas - musical ride; thrilling pyrotechnic I me,thodg of cultivating the teazel. ants and children by our soldiers dur- ficial to the land. The seed is the display. Perhaps you have never heard of ing the war. - When the war was ,dv- richest protein -producing ,grain that ,, England's oldest and finest all -brass teazeLhs. The nap on your sunt or er, the French Government bought can be grown in this province. It band _ BESSES-O'-'i'H'-BARN", overcoat is put there by Teazels. U.' S. Army stores avlerseases, and' also yields a ,large amount of oil and thirtyother, militar • and concert They give the warm finish to coats ,acquired a vas( which has a wide commercial use. quantlrhy .of gum The cake or meal obtained from the bands will play during the Exhibition. and suis that i so much desired. A which had been exposed' to the weer- processing of soybeans to extract the woollen suit without the teazel would itlher for months. The sla,gaciotus The po p u i a r British sportsman ' look as if it were made of steel wool. French demanded that the Maker take oil is an excellent high protein con- KAYE DON will be present with his The Prince also introduced another it :back ars imperfect, and refund the centrate which can be aged witch good super -boat "MISS ENGLAND III", itlea• He could' not understand why full price. Wrigley chid so +stile+ results in balancing rations for live. _ and visitors will also get a close-up his farmers produced cheese two=feet tharn shave his reputation spoiled, in a stock' view of the BRITISH SCHNEIDER . in diameter. The cheese is a popular newly4perned market, Other furca CUP PLANE (der of rile official gn S peed record of 3 .67 m.p.h. English ,Bet wkly coatviru't it be vetrtttres have m+e1t,',with difficulties. made in sizes from three to six in- .. Wrigley spertrt 'large suns in India ' Potato Gathering, EXHIBITION CIiO_ OF 2 000 cher in diameter and packed in indi- attempting to induce the natives to w,-•, V01GE9 appears i -n four cone' in tFie , vidu l packages -s'o' the housewife Dhow gum instead of t)lie betel nut, Friday, July 22, marked an event coliseum on nights of Aug. 27, Sept. 1, could' bury it without the necessity of And in China had to teach cusitomlers of unusual interest to the ?' 6 and 10. the groom erthibitirrg :it Constantly in not to swallow gllnik :1�ealars, had' to growers of Ontario, when afield the open? His tenants now f'mmfgh provide ,shears to retailers (for cut- 'day" was held at Manvers by the On- �r' . MEN'S MARATHON SWIM, the British mvjelt with s'mtallerf-siz- 'ting snicks in half), .since not one tario Department of Agriculture, in Wed. Aug. 3I. Olympic natators ed cheeses and the British grocers Qiinese in 10,00'01 could afford to buy conjunction with the Central Ontario ,'', in various events. Ou.tboard.Moror- are 'pleased' with them,, a whole snick of chewingPotato Growers+' Association. Over r, boat .Races -Track Stars direct from Then the Prince hackled his cattle" _ 100 attended this function and en A,, this year's Olympic Games; Judging joy - +F growers. He told them that in old= What exactly,is- clhewing guar ? ed a s f , Competitions, if or6es; Cattle, Sheep, b splendid program including the en days large British families sat Childish fable inspired by motlhers' inspection of several potato fields and Swine, poultry; Flower Show; interna- + �w> tionalDognndCatShows;Trottingand down to lig roast -hoof dinners. Now- 'warning tales, would' ,have in awit- the discussion of potato diseases. !, a cher ' Pacing oda broth rtt Races a the families are s it r of rubber, ' + g and $6,000 Futurities, Ys ma a and and 1 � , horses hoofs A most edifying talk was deliver- s� • •• the iSunday roast beef dinner its no glue, In •tnxbh it is nothing ed by John Tucker, chief of certified t°, r' Reduced fares on Bus Lines, Railroads longer universal. Younger folks go more cuirious than ,chicle ,plus sing&+ seed inspectors for, the Dominion. I.# and Steamships. Consult local agents. out in their touring cars or in their Plug flavor, Half its weight is pure Another address to receive particu- k;r side -scars. He bold the cattle grow- sm>�r, which is why a well chewed lar appreciation was that of 'J. T. f Mail reservations now for Exhibition ers that the big steer might look good piece of gum. weighs feels than a vin- t,ase,1n Ontario Marketifvg Board. 2,000•Vaice Chorus Cancerta or Grand- on fair grounds, ,but not to feature piece. ;r',, stand Pageant ` The' Truimph", ' Tha �peeclr of Prof. Henry G. $ell r °a the fa,CteTfing of the animal. Butch- The chief ingredient„ chicle, is wthat, of. the Department of Chemistry at I'ww , ers throughout England ineftntly see- lYlrt� the chew in chewing gum, Bike O.A.C., was well `received, i"t WILLIAM TNGLIB, onded the Prince's motion. The cat- rubber; it is the cougrnlated, sap of a 'Other spealcers included E. K. 1?a� President. tle growers followed it, , To -day one tropical tree: the, sapoddlrla (Sapota Hampson, Canadian Potash Syrrdi- +uc} will not find the twenoty-pound 'roast Achras), -which flourrishes in Mexiico tate; R. IT..S'tinchfield of New York {I , PT. W. WATERS, °a 'of Alden days on `bvttchers' tables. and 'Central America. Since a sap- who it editor of the "Better Crops t General Manager. r T'lte Prince has a standing ,err-° odilla tree eanmtat be tappers for chicle with Plant F b.' s' g \ sod' pu Ircation; 1VIaj'or v rangeme It with ten scare of big Iron- until it is 30 years old (a t lives to a Blacks Canadian Industries Ltd,- G. �,,;" , ,. I don stores to have his eMploye'e4 and great old age: many trees now pro E, Croughton; , Ontsirio Marketing, ,„s, F „ I .- +,' lr` '' I A Y ,4 �r ,Ir { i `Jlr i4 a a W1 i. SiAa1! t ha a.. e .n` f ` ,1 + a v„ ' Ch1 ` ,v, ' ," ,i . ,t..w�Yi....n. ,.t, .,"k iG:, .: E L, r.,..dn. r,P t ,i. :: dr ) s ,,. t„ f.i ... _ -. „ ,�;14:a. , ,,.,.ax t t ,.,,o .,, n,,.,.. :, .,k.)_.. . ,v... ,. . 'Bo.A, rj. '° • A 'potato dusting.' demop condueteein• thq'evening, eat concentration of` everyone in anee. . Fertilizer Tests on wheat. Definite results fromthe applica-I tion of fertilizei to fall wheat have been obtained ,by 73 farmers in On- tario. Already there are 232 plots under test and under- the supervision of the "Chemistry Department of the Agricultural "College. Most of the leading fertilizer rmlixtures were us- ed. After three .years of this experi- mental work the Chemistry Depart- ment makes the statement that win- ter killing of wheat canbe overcome' toa large extent by applying suit- able fertilizers on well drai•ried soil. Also it was found that fertiliziedl wheat stools out much more, abund- antly than does unfertilized wheat. Fertilized 'wheat ripens mote uni- formly than unfertilized wheat, and 8 to 10 days earlier. Also a satis- factory catch of clover and gra°ss is nearly always obtained if fertilizers are used when.seeding grain. Fertilizers applied withthe drill give better results than the same fertilizers when applied broadcast. As the increase in yields is the deciding factor in using fertilizers 11 extra 'bushels per acre seems to leavfe a margin of profit. This was the average obtained in the past two years. There is an added benefit for one or two years in the stand of clover and _:grass following wheat. Chemical On Bills Traps Extortionist J. Clarence Thoman, extortionist, took "tainted" money -f -money soaked in a few ounces of silvier nitrate - that 'led to his capture after he had slipped through a cordon of .100 po- lice, . This was revealed as police at Wyonrdng barracks continued to ques- tion Thomvan, who had admitted he is the man who, tried to extort $15,- 0,00 from Harry I. Magee, wealthy carpet manufacturer, under threat of kidnapping his children. Magee dropped a dummy money package ;wrapped in two $20 bills from an airplane on lonely Hunlock Mountain. A 'hundred ,police .closed in toward the spot where the ,pack- age was dropped. Thoman managed to ,elude them But 'Magee, acting under instruc- tions from Sergt. W'i'lliam Clark, of the state, pokey, had soaked the 'mlaney package in silver nitrate which stained, the extortionist's hands black when he grabbed the, bundle, He couldn't reomlave the stain: And that was :how police caught him after a year's search in which some of the most sensationally shrewd detective methods ever used in this, • country were employed in the hunt for him. A year ago Thoman, who is a tele- graph operator emrployc-d by the Pennsylvania Railroad, decided - to build a 'home for himself; his wife and their thiree children. According to his confession he de- cided "some wealthy grerson.oughtt to pay for it." I I., -- And Iso he began sending letters to wealthy residents of Northeastern. Pennsylvania. Before he began writ- ing threatening notes to I, Tagee, Thoman had threatened Mrs. Saman- .than Mills, 80 years' old, of Narbti- 'coke; 'William. R. Robinson, of Sun- bury; Mrs. C. T. Aiken of Selinsgrove. and Mrs. John (Wood of Beavertown. All the letters were written on rather unusual stationery in a pecu- liar, spidery handwriting, and were signed "X -X -X." The four victims all reported the threats to police, and Mrs. Mills was so frightened that she left her home ami went to live ata Wilkes-Barre 'hotel. , When Magee 'began getting the threatenung letters abut six weeks ago he went to police. Sergt. Clark recognized the handwriting, 'told Ma- gee the extortionist was now the ob- ject ,of a 'hunt by a score of troopers and asked the young millionaire to ,help capture him, Magee agreed. In his next letter Thoman instructed Magee, who is a licensed airplane 'pilot, to fly his plane up the Susquehanna River+ up - til he sane a large white cloth marked with the symbol 11X -X -1C." When, he saw that cloth Magee was to drop the $15,000. ,Magee after a conference. with po- lice, flew up the river three times looking for the signal cloth. Thoman sat in the lobby railroad tower art Re- treat, on the other side of the river, and watched the plane soar by. He was just watching the man. Just as he thought, giving ,his catch en- ough play 5,ii'd aking sure that the money would ece7ve'd. ,Then Ile sent agee another letter with the same instructions. Magee with the Chemically treated peekage of money, flew up the r'vmer, On the top Of a tall pine tree he sane the signal • where Thoma¢ had tied it. • From vantage 'Points for twenty, Miles up and down tehe S+wquehaanla a hundred troopers were watching MageJe's' Plane. He had! ,arranged' with Serg. Clark to drop into a spiral over the spoilt where he sighted the Sig- nal. . When 'Magee spiraled down, the troopers in fast cars and on mw4ar•- cyciles began closing in on Hlunlock Mountain. Magee dropped the package' with Such perfect aims that Thomian, in his confession, said that the bundae .al- truist struck 'hirm The exlbortionist Pounced. upon, it with both bandla. .._., 'He discovered that instead of $01 - DOD, the head been dropped, only a ,bung d1e of ,paper two o 0 til $'2 is wrap- ped , around it. Cursing, he took the $40 and "lade Iris cautious way dawn Hurnlwek M1oumitain, ,slipped tthroulgh the cor- don of police and retiurnied to his lonely signal tower at Retreat. But already the silver nitrate hdd bi&pped `him. %fore. he had been back at work an hour hoe noticed Ibhat his hands were discolored. He tried) bo wash off the stains, but they grew darker. Th•omian vmshed' ead wmhleldl but his hands ,remained. black, a 'harrovvifig, aw-er-)te8reT1t reniriruder that the law kas readiQ oust for him, ,that it aI- or o r'+ hrIV { �tt1 's' t.' 11 , ',�;� I 4 � . • 0. - ,�. , 11 .. . I .­ I I . I� I .� Wjya. You do not have, to upe drastic and stroxig cathartics that cause irritation. ENO'S "Fruit Salt," by gently and safely ridding the intestinal tract of goisoais, will help to make you and keep you healthy. A'daah of ENO in a glass of water every morning or, night prevents the evils of constipation. Be ENO consciousl Cawis . ,, h N LJ I .Fv'�r-v,,i'l"�,��.f�,�illt')�l-.lil-1,�q 0 ! I I I't M T. il � ', . t, 0 ,. 4 I,.�, .� , I A 4. r a d , � Y '4111.",,, '. . ,,,, .1 . . . 1-1 ­�,�", . ,I � , , , � � I v ,it 7 ,- ifa?d"11111i, it:.'.'° i �'f1Flr r 4 iris" , � + r:.: n .; � -, ,. :�� 6., a1�. d .,, 1.,15+ 1. 4: s„ , iq. 1 .,: ,,, s, , ,.1,. ., . cr 4 -. ,t i iN. n x.. ,a.r, .$ yh 1. ,. :r \�.n:u4. f C,.. .,. , ,,. :,r, L,.,, n1S,y r_, 's, a. an t, rl.. t1 a�a�.t} �„�' ,�, wr ,i r> a ,.. r,,r au a.a ..,-,.�•3 ,.9.,..�a. ✓, ,u.e, �,�., ., ,_ds4`l.;i..�. ;fit.. d �,ew.G„hh,.,Ei ,..,i,,:F,}%,to-n., l,..r Kul. Y. ,, pax sr,.,..• ..,,. ,.. .i.,.:Loi .. gee, N•a .....,.»�., rYv1.•u, ,, ._. .. �:mA,-„ ready had. touched 'him. "Yes,- she replied, brightening a Meanwhile every bank and store in little, "I engaged three." the section had -been asked to ,look: "Three?" he: echoed, aghast. "Bot, out for the stained bills,- Shortly af- mly dear, you mush be out -of, yew "' terwards a (bank ill Danville reported 'and" one of, the bills had turned? ug there. "No, dear," she sighed, "I'm quiiw It was traced to the deposit of a all right. You see, one comes ta- rural mail carrier wlho'r nnle b,pred, he morrow, ones on the tenth, and an- shad hadgot the bill' from Edwat4 Whal- other -an thf 'sixteenth." en, a filling station proprietor. Whalen -remembered the license number of the car of the man w'ho him the bill, He, too, - Quick Cars Needed givien recalled, that the -driver had peculiarly stain- • In Modern Traffic ed hands which he seemed to .be try- ing 'tioo conceal. The old mechanic says: In consid- olice were sent ,into the Danville 'the i ering maintenance these days, car section to watch for 'the man with owners never should fgrget that 'blackened 'hands. Imodern conditions of trafTil all call They spotted him as he was driving Ioudily for autenuoldles, that . are into Danville. They questioned Tho- "quick" as distinguished from fast,,. man far a while before. he admitted ,The distinction between the -two is the -plot. Every 'time he would assert one that is recognized by race driv- his innocence the troopers woludd look ers, and has (been, for years., meaningly at his hands. By a car that is 'quick, the racer After about .an hour Thoman could•d'river ,means one .that is eapable of stand it no longer. stopping fast and picking up with "I did it -+I did it," he shrieked lightning speed. Such an automlobila bolding his black hands before his .is ideal in traffic, where it is hard. eyes. "You can see I did it. See est to make even reasonably good what.the-money did to me.". ; ' time. -�` , Any ear's quickness is' dependent 1. • AD a ,degree upon its design, but be- Clutch T' yond that there's a maintenance standard requirement to be met that If you 'have any difficulty getting more than pays for itself in tf'rrue- into low engage the clutch pedal for I~i;,avingg and the prevention of, wear an instant, then declutch and try 'and tear on the car. With respect again. Should there be a grinding of to quickness, let us look at steering.' the gears as you try to shift the Any looseness, wear or heaviness ills indications are, that the clutch is this feature will make any car slow., dragging. Switch off the ignition, These shortcomings are doing just s'h'ift to low, hold the clutch pedal that to many' cars whose owners to the "floor and re -crank the engine. 'zhouldn't berputting up with it at alk The same rules apply to shifting in- Many •a car owner tolerates show to reverse.brakes far' no apparently* sound rea- ' ,son. So long as he puts off having them -adjusted, or relined, he has to ^ allow for -it in 'his driving and the WIT AND,,.WISDOM ' only way to make the allowance lis, to Mussolini is said to be writin_e- a drive slowly enough for. the ina:d'e- ,quate brake's to" stop the machine mo. -vie based on Caesar's life." 'Our scredn "experts will probably title it safely. Then, of couyse,' there al- ."Sirens of Gaul," or possibly "Cleo- ways) is. the chance that he' will fail to ,make the comlpensation in his patra's "First Love." -Omaha World- driving some day and have an acci- Herald. dent as a r6sult. 11 The other,side of the quick car pie- The--mlayor of Detroit says polo is ture is the manner in which it at- a game that should be enjoyed by all, celerattes. A poor carburetor adjust - Those who can't afford horses can ment, inadequate lubrication, slow enjoy watching other folks fall off timing, incorrect valve, adjustment • theirs. -Dayton Daily News. "' .`and several other small but import- • ,ant things tend to rob thousa5,ls of But if you are sd law-abiding why cars of their inherently fine gvrek- do you slow down when you hear a ness in acceleration, All are easy to motorcycle coming from behind?- San Francisco Chronicle. 'overcome. I'd suggest that all ear owners keep an e15ie on, those Aspects of pei•- formance that can be summed up un - The woman who doesn't under- der the head, of quickness. , stand the art of making over her last year's hat should never marry a • man to reform him.--�-Ottawa Journal. LONDON AND WINGEIAM Some foods heat the blood, a doc- South, for observes. And some of the stuff the restaurants serve is positively Wingharn • 2 5 guaranteed to make the blood 'boil. Belgravia .... , ............... 2.22 -Haverhill Evening Gazette. Blyth ....................... 2.33 born ................. 2.40 Brazil is reported burning coffee Clinto Clinton .................. 3.08 in locomotives, but some domestics ( Brucefield .................. 3.26 still stick to burning it on the kit- Kippers ... • . , ... 3.33 then stove. -Ottawa Journal. Hensall .................... 3.39 Exeter ............. I....... 3.53 Farmer drops wallet containing $770. Cow finds and eats it, Here's North. a test of the dairyman's feeling phil- Exeter .................... 10.59 osophr-that you get out of a cow Hensall .................... 11.12 what you put into her. - Toledo Kippen .................... 11.18 Blade. Brucefield ............ ..... 1127. Clinton .................... 11.ti8 A writer tells of a Nebraska town Londesboro ................. 12.16 in which the people are "just like Blyth ........................ 12.23 one 'big family and all attend to their Belgrave ............. I..... 12.33 own business." But who ever heard Wingham .................. 12.47 of a family like that?'- Florence (Ala.) Herald. --- I • The planet Jupiter is 1400 times C. N. IL , as large as ,the earth. Just the thing East. for some endurance fliers. -Christian a.Tn, p -m. Science Monitor. Goderich .......... 6.35 2.40 One redeeming feature about the Holrxlesville ....... , . 6.50 2.56 Clinton ........ 3.05 urian who made a hole in one is that Seaforth ...... p 7.12 2 3.21 he hasn't any }notion pictures of it St. Columlban ...... 7.18 327 to show you. -Life. Dublin ............... 723, 3.32 Convention spellbinders might find .. . ' West. � ' solace in the' rtthdught that writing Dublin .. ....: ....1 11.24 9.12 "boo'{ on i ballot, renders the same St. Columban- ...... . 11.29 null and, voi&-- De'broit News. Seaforth ............ 11.40•'. 6.25 Clinton ......... 111.9- 0.0, .- .0t'- I Holmesville Hlalmesville ........ 12.05 9.58 The Whole Truth Goderich ..,......... 12.20 10.06 +Watts, the club bdiv, was trying to -I •�I.. 1 impress his listeners ;with one of his C. P. R. TIME TALL - fishing exploits. Presently he came to the part of the narratave where he East. • landed the fish. ". 8.m. "And' I can tell you, now," he said Goderich ................... 5.50 �. I n 1 you farcibL ca tel vo never saw • Menne .. such a fish." 11,Hleofirr•, ''hear! I believe you," said Me'Gaw ..................: 6.04 Auburn ............ I ...... 6.11 one bf .t'he memtber& with. a sly smile. Blyth..................... 6.25 Walton .................. 6.40 so McNaught ...............i.. 6.52 Reserves , Toronto................... 10.26 RTS-. Suburbs looked worn out ar,d West. ' unhappy, ISIhe• had abviouiily baen a'm' ii , ..+.40 having ,,% tiring day. ............... McNa McNaught ................. 111.48 "Whaf love you been d oing'to get WaltoTi .................... 12.01 like this? ashed her, husband. BIyth ... . ............... . . 12.12 "1 ve tuen r`v1Lnd to all the ser: s'ro Auburn ......... ...... , 12.23 • ,age,n6os; in the -district tiying to find 'NeGaw................. 34 maids," soba replied. ,12 Menset : . .............. '1.2,41 "Were you successful?" he eked. f . .� Goderich .................. °� 112.44 ', . t, 0 ,. 4 I,.�, .� , I A 4. r a d , � Y '4111.",,, '. . ,,,, .1 . . . 1-1 ­�,�", . ,I � , , , � � I v ,it 7 ,- ifa?d"11111i, it:.'.'° i �'f1Flr r 4 iris" , � + r:.: n .; � -, ,. :�� 6., a1�. d .,, 1.,15+ 1. 4: s„ , iq. 1 .,: ,,, s, , ,.1,. ., . cr 4 -. ,t i iN. n x.. ,a.r, .$ yh 1. ,. :r \�.n:u4. f C,.. .,. , ,,. :,r, L,.,, n1S,y r_, 's, a. an t, rl.. t1 a�a�.t} �„�' ,�, wr ,i r> a ,.. r,,r au a.a ..,-,.�•3 ,.9.,..�a. ✓, ,u.e, �,�., ., ,_ds4`l.;i..�. ;fit.. d �,ew.G„hh,.,Ei ,..,i,,:F,}%,to-n., l,..r Kul. Y. ,, pax sr,.,..• ..,,. ,.. .i.,.:Loi .. gee, N•a .....,.»�., rYv1.•u, ,, ._. .. �:mA,-„